Troubled Waters

Her ethics troubles, in wake of Charlie Rangel's, put new focus
on the Congressional Black Caucus's way of doing business.

By The Prowler – 8.2.10

Rep. Maxine Waters who may be facing a formal House of Representatives ethics trial over her activities on behalf of a bank, is just the most recent member of the Congressional Black Caucus to face such an investigation. Currently New York Rep. Charles Rangel is facing an ethics trial, following in the footsteps of ethically challenged Louisiana Rep. William Jefferson. Waters, the long-time Southern California representative, is, according to House sources, facing charges that she provided special access to OneUnited Bank, a Massachusetts based bank that is similar in its history to the notorious ShoreBank in Chicago.

House officials say the Waters investigation is focused on Waters' activities in 2008, when House sources say she had communications with Treasury officials involved in determining whether OneUnited would receive $50 million in funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Waters also serves on the House Financial Services Committee. Those communications are mostly phone calls, say sources, she had with her husband, Sidney Williams, a former board member of OneUnited and a current holder of at least $250,000 in bank stock, as well as with current OneUnited officials and with Treasury officials overseeing bailout program. OneUnited had lost millions in 2008 from holdings it had in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac financial instruments; in the end, OneUnited received $12 million in TARP funds.

Waters has strenuously denied any wrongdoing in the case, and said her contacts -- including setting up a meeting with Treasury officials on behalf of the National Bankers Association, a group of African-American banks and a longtime supporter of Waters and the Congressional Black Caucus -- were in keeping with her longstanding assistance to community-based financial institutions. In that meeting with TARP officials, according to House sources, a OneUnited official with ties to the bankers' association asked for TARP funds for OneUnited.

Waters' troubles are also expected to lead to a greater focus on the group at the center of the Rangel-Waters scandals: the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), made up of 42 members of Congress, but a caucus unlike just about any other on Capitol Hill.

"You want to know why caucus members like Jefferson and Rangel and Waters are in trouble?" asks a former Democrat staffer on the Ways and Means Committee. "It's because they are so used to hitting up corporations and business associations for dollars for the CBC that they really don't see a difference for what they do on their own. Rangel almost certainly saw no difference between hitting up companies for his own job-training program in New York and what he would do to steer money to the CBC."

The staffer pointed out that the National Bankers Association, which Waters claimed asked for the meeting that is now at the center of her potential troubles, has been an active supporter of the CBC in the past.

Unlike many other caucuses on the Hill, which are in many cases informal associations of House members focused on specific issues, the Congressional Black Caucus is a financial powerhouse, with a 501(c)(3) foundation under its control, and a $4 million townhouse headquarters in downtown Washington, far from the prying eyes of Capitol Hill reporters. That townhouse's mortgage was paid for in 2008 by a fundraising program that tapped dozens of U.S. corporations -- including AT&T, General Motors, and Coca-Cola -- for tens of thousands of dollars. Coca-Cola in the past has also underwritten the organization's annual prayer breakfast.

Because the Congressional Black Caucus steers all those corporate dollars through its nonprofit, charitable educational foundation, it is not beholden to federal campaign finance rules. And that foundation has pulled in millions -- more than $50 million, in fact, between 2004 and 2008.

In the past, the CBC has liked to portray itself as the "conscience of the Congress," but in recent years, that conscience has been flexible depending on the issue and how much a corporation or trade association was willing to pay. "You may not be able to buy the whole caucus, but for a given issue or bill, all you really need are few of those members to support you," says a current House Republican leadership aide. "Some of the negative talk is just jealousy that others caucuses can't pull off this kind of fundraising, but much of it comes out of knowing that there is a quid pro quo going on there, and there isn't much any of us can do about it."

Even the CBC appears aware that its activities may be skirting around ethics rules. In May, the CBC sought to curtail the ethics procedures its own Democrat leadership put in place. Twenty members of the CBC signed onto a resolution that would roll back the powers of the independent Office of Congressional Ethics, which is overseen by a panel of private citizens. The OCE is empowered to initiate and investigate possible ethics violations, but cannot prosecute ethics cases. The OCE hands its findings and recommendations over to the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, which is comprised of congressional members and can conduct investigations, has subpoena power, and recommends penalties for lawmakers found in violation of House ethics rules. The OCE can also pass along its findings to other federal agencies should it deem it appropriate.

To date, the OCE has launched investigations of more than a dozen members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Rangel. The CBC was also investigated for its annual members-trip to the Caribbean, which is paid for by the CBC Foundation. The CBC's resolution sought to change the operations of the OCE, barring it from initiating its own investigations and requiring a sworn complaint by a citizen claiming first-hand knowledge of the alleged violation, barring referrals to the House Ethics office within 60 days of an election, and the sealing of all findings by the OCE from public view.

"If people want to know what Democrats are really nervous about if they lose the House, they just have to look at the OCE and what it's doing," says the House GOP leadership aide. "We're going to take our hits, too, but there is a lot more dirt over on the other side of the aisle to be dug up in the coming years. I think Democrats believe the OCE is going to be far more empowered under our control than theirs."

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